Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

Year: 2007

  • Rational Thought

    Sigh, I’m not listed, but then that’s not really important. The kernel is that these sites hold the torch of rational thought aloft. Check them out.
     
     
  • The Mugwump Youth

     
    It’s a difficult case. Some, Like Inayat Bungawala, make her out to be almost a wronged innocent. I can’t say that I fully agree. I’m closer to agreeing with Rachel. She was a foolish young woman, but nevertheless was very close to being the unwitting foot-soldier.
     
    When it all comes down to the line; when I was 23 years old, I did not dream of killing people to the extent that this misguided young woman appeared to do. Her mind has been poisoned. Hopefully, the poison can be drawn without destroying her.
  • The Portable Atheist

    Looks like another item is going on to my wish list of books to read: The Portable Atheist, an anthology of pieces selected and introduced by Christopher Hitchens. Here’s an excerpt from the introduction. As usual, Hitch is not backward in coming forward:
    And who, really, will turn away from George Eliot and James Joyce and Joseph Conrad in order to rescrutinize the bare and narrow and constipated and fearful world of Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, and Osama bin Laden?  
    And…
    It is in the hope of strengthening and arming the resistance to the faith-based, and to faith itself, that this anthology of combat with humanity’s oldest enemy is respectfully offered.  
    Of course, as he realises full well, we have met the enemy, and the enemy is us…
  • The Machine is Us/ing Us

    Here’s a terrific little video that conveys something of the excitement I feel when I think about the Web and the extraordinary changes that I’ve seen in its technology in the last 15 years.
     
     
    It really doesn’t seem that long ago that I was creating web pages using Notepad (see about one minute into the video). And I wonder if most people watching this video appreciate the enormous change that is taking place as a result of the change from form to content. When we started, the web was all about form – HTML is a markup language – it describes how a page should look; but with the advent of XML, we are describing not just form, but content itself. It’s the change from passively viewing the web to actively programming the web.
     
    (hat tip to the Prospect blog for the link)
  • More Snake-Oil Salesmen

    Never underestimate the capacity for manufacturing new ways to turn a buck. Le Canard Noir draws our attention to a company called Exradia which seems to be hoping to create a new health scare around mobile phones. As he says:
    Basic marketing. Create a fear, a gap, a need. Offer a solution. 
  • Another Milestone

    I see that today my blog clocked up its 250,000th page view. Thanks for dropping by.
  • Stoning Is A Metaphor

    I’m sorry, but in amongst a few good points, Dr. Muhammad Abdul Bari does talk a lot of nonsense. Stoning is a metaphor for disapproval? Tell that to those who have been killed by it. I also see that, rather than being in favour of book-burning, he is in favour of pulping those that he disapproves of. Oh well, perhaps he wants to keep his carbon footprint smaller.
     
    Ah, I see that Ophelia has more. Worth reading.
  • How High Is The Bar?

    There’s a fad going round at the moment whereby anyone can test the reading comprehension level required for a given blog. Apparently, I set the bar fairly low:
    cash advance 
     
    I’m actually quite pleased by this. I take it to mean that I express myself in terms that a wide audience can understand, rather than the content itself is overly simple. Well, that’s my rationalisation, anyway…
  • Hema’s Product Page

    I don’t generally like web pages that use lots of Flash technology, but I confess that I do like this product page of Hema (a Dutch store – rather like a slightly upmarket Woolworths). Do go and visit, and wait a moment for the fun to start…
    Edit: alas, this page no longer works…
  • Energy For Free

    Never underestimate the desire for wishful thinking. Ben Goldacre reports on yet another "energy for free" non-story. The video of the "news interview" made me want to slap all concerned around the cheeks with a wet fish.
  • Attenborough on God

    National Treasure Sir David Attenborough reflects on the question of god.
     
       
  • Managing Photo Libraries – Part 5

    Time, I think, to return once again to that hobby horse of mine – managing my collection of photos using my computer. As the title suggests, I’ve written about the topic a number of times before – see the list of links at the end of this post – but it’s probably a good idea to recap some of the issues, and to state where I currently am in my search for tools. After all, a number of things have changed in the tools and operating system markets.

    First, a recap of my groundrule for managing photo collections:

    I insist that any software used in the digital workflow (transfer from camera to computer, image selection, digital processing, cataloguing, publishing and asset management) will respect any EXIF, IPTC and XMP metadata that may be stored in the image file itself.

    I am not interested in asset management software that stores image metadata away in a proprietary format in the software itself. That way lies painting oneself into a corner down the road… However, I will accept asset management software that copies metadata from image files into its own database for performance reasons, so long as the database and the image files metadata content are kept in sync transparently (i.e. it takes little or no effort on my part).

    Equally, any digital processing software must respect metadata that is embedded in the image file itself. It may seem an obvious thing, but they don’t always do this – the editor in Microsoft’s Digital Image Suite (now thankfully defunct) actually stripped out the metadata on any image it touched.

    Over the course of the years, I’ve used a number of asset management applications, some of which, it’s true, did not follow my own groundrule (for example, the old Thumbsplus version 5, or Microsoft’s Digital Image Suite). My excuse was that I was unaware of the importance of IPTC and XMP metadata at the time. It wasn’t until February 2005 that I saw the light.

    Since that time, I’ve tried a number of applications to manage and catalogue my photo library:

    All of these applications cover the whole spectrum of the digital workflow in varying degrees of depth, at prices that range from free (Picasa, Windows Photo Gallery, Windows Live Photo Gallery) to big bucks (Lightroom and Expression Media). And all of them, with varying degrees of success, cover at least some of the IPTC/XMP metadata.

    I should also make an honourable mention of PixVue, which, alas, is no longer available. Rather than a standalone application, it was a free utility that plugged itself into the Windows Explorer. It had the effect of extending Explorer into an effective IPTC metadata management tool. It was only ever available for Windows XP. I liked it a lot, and when I was running Windows XP, it was my tool of choice for cataloguing my images.

    Microsoft has made a similar free utility available, Photo Info, which like PixVue, extends the Windows Explorer, this time for both Windows XP and Vista. It’s not bad, but it has two drawbacks for me:

    • It does not support the full “IPTC Core”standard (it’s missing the Creator Contact Info metadata)
    • It’s “clunkier” to use than PixVue was – I could catalogue batches of images faster with PixVue than I can with Photo Info

    But for all that, Photo Info is not bad for a free utility. Unfortunately, when one steps back and looks at the bigger picture, what I see is the same old story about Microsoft: the product groups have their own fiefdoms, and they very rarely acknowledge each other, let alone seem to talk and integrate their products with each other.

    Let me explain. Photo Info plugs into Windows Explorer. So when you right-click on an image in the Explorer, you see a menu that includes an entry for Photo Info.

    Photo Info test 1

    Choosing that pops up the Photo Info panel, where the IPTC metadata can be reviewed or edited.

    Windows Explorer is the Swiss Army knife for file management in Windows. It does a broad range of things, but without too much depth. When we are looking at images, the tool that Microsoft are now pushing us towards is Windows Live Photo Gallery. Don’t ask about Windows Photo Gallery, the tool that shipped with Vista, that seems now to be a dead end as far as Microsoft are concerned, even though in some areas (searching by ratings, for example) it has features that Windows Live Photo Gallery does not yet have.

    Right, so we open up Windows Live Photo Gallery. This doesn’t reveal much of the underlying IPTC/XMP metadata, so we right-click on an image and guess what? – there’s no menu item for Photo Info. To get to the full metadata, you have to click on the “Open file location” item, which in turn opens up Windows Explorer, and from there, you have to right-click on the image file to open up Photo Info…

    Photo Info test 2

    Daft, clumsy, and a clear example that product groups in Microsoft don’t actually step back and look at the bigger picture. It’s a real shame, because Windows Live Photo Gallery has a lot of promise. It may well be that it can be extended without too much trouble on Microsoft’s part. For example, I understand that the acquisition engine that lies at the heart of the photo import facility supports a flexible template syntax. At the moment, the options available are not flexible enough for me.  What I want to do is:

    1. Automatically create a Folder hierarchy based on the dates when the photos were taken. E.g., if I have some photos taken on 30th August 2007, some taken on 3rd September 2007 and some taken on 10th September, then what I should end up with are three new folders that have the following paths under the root folder (let’s assume that this is “Pictures”)- Pictures\2007\8\2007-08-30
      – Pictures\2007\9\2007-09-03
      – Pictures\2007\9\2007-09-10Note that this is a true hierarchy, built automatically by the import process itself. What WLPG does at the moment is create three new folders all at the same level under the root; I.e.:- Pictures\2007-08-30
      – Pictures\2007-09-03
      – Pictures\2007-09-10

      This will very quickly build up into an unwieldy mass of folders – all under the root.

    2. Rename the image files with a true date-timestamp format. E.g. IMG0969.jpg, which was taken on the 10th September 2007 at 12:08:03 gets renamed to 20070910-1208-03.jpg. Again, WLPG will only allow me to rename a file with a datestamp, it does not support timestamp renaming. For action shots with sub-second timings, then the renaming process can use a sequential suffix, e.g. 01, 02, 03, etc.

    I hope that, if the acquisition engine is indeed flexible, that Microsoft will expose some of this flexibility in Windows Live Photo Gallery in order to meet scenarios such as mine.

    I also like the way in which Windows Live Photo Gallery has three ways (currently) of navigating through my photo collection. The navigation pane allows navigation/filtering by:

    • folder structure
    • tags (keywords)
    • date taken

    However, it would be even better if it also added in the ability to navigate/filter via

    • rating (as Windows Photo Gallery does)
    • location (using the IPTC/XMP location metadata, as Adobe’s Lightroom does)

    And icing on the cake would be the ability to filter using AND/OR relationships, e.g. show me all the photos that have the tags “restaurant” AND “Martin” OR “Geoff” AND where City IS “London”.

    To me, this is the sort of thing that should be possible in the basic operating system platform itself. Indeed, it seems to be the sort of thing that Microsoft themselves were planning for in the original design of Vista, before components such as WinFS got dropped. But for now, I have to go for dedicated applications (each with their own databases) to deal with my various data collections – my photos, my music, my books and my videos. They all behave in different ways of course.

    Which leads me on to IDimager, the application that I currently use in my workflow for digital photography.

    The plus points of IDimager is that it is:

    • flexible
    • extensible
    • handles IPTC/XMP very well indeed
    • excellently supported (the developer, Hertwig van Zwietering, is extremely responsive on the product support forums)

    It’s worth pointing out that all of the above requirements that I listed that I would like to see in Windows Live Photo Gallery can be done with IDimager.

    If IDimager has a downside for me, it’s that it is simply too much power for what I need. I’m only ever using a fraction of what it is capable of. And my ideal is to have this sort of functionality available as part of the operating system platform rather than as unique tools. Still, the price of the Personal edition of IDimager (the version that I use) was very reasonable, so I am currently using it as the basis of my digital workflow for:

    • acquisition of images from the camera to computer
    • selection of images, using the light-table function
    • cataloguing of the collection, with IPTC/XMP metadata

    Although it also has the capability of doing digital processing, I tend to fall back on the editor within Photoshop Elements, simply because I know it better.

    Hert has just announced version 4 of IDimager. I’ve been using the beta version, and like it a lot. If you need a very capable tool as the basis of your digital workflow, and yet faint at the prices that Adobe and Microsoft charge for their professional tools, then you could do a lot worse than check out IDimager. More people need to discover this terrific tool.

    Update 17 December 2009: Version 5 of IDimager is now available. I’ve been using the beta for a couple of months and have instantly bought the upgrade to version 5. It’s a terrific tool – highly recommended!

    Update 26 March 2013: Since last year, IDimager is no longer available. Its successor is Photo Supreme, which I am now using.

    Other entries in this saga:

  • Batten Down The Hatches

    Both the Dutch and the UK TV news programmes lead tonight with dire warnings about the storm that is brewing in the North Sea. A combination of high winds and high tides mean that the East cost of Britain and the Dutch coast are likely to experience the highest tides since 1953.
     
    While I hope that the communities are better prepared than they were then, I am somewhat glad that we have moved to higher ground. We will see what the cold light of dawn brings.
  • Religion As Politics

    Stephen Bates looks back on his stint as the Guardian’s Religious Affairs Correspondent. We live in interesting times, as the Chinese might say. And clearly, if Graham Dow, the Bishop of Carlisle, is anything to go by, there would seem to be more walking around outside the asylum than in it.
  • Donjong Heights

    It sounds interesting. Enough to buy a copy, I think…
  • Windows Live Photo Gallery

    Microsoft has formally released the first version of Windows Live Photo Gallery, along with a number of other Windows Live products. Unfortunately, the “Publish to Flickr” bug that I pointed out is still there in this version. So I won’t be using it to upload my photos.
  • Old-Fashioned

    Call me old-fashioned, but I can’t stand shows where ritual humiliation seems to play a major part of the attraction. I confess that I do make an exception in the case of The Apprentice, but that’s another story. Recently I began to watch a series on BBC2: Classical Star, but I never made it through to the end of the first episode because it seemed to me to have been injected with cheap game show attitudes, including ritual humiliation of the contestants. And I confess that the lynchpin of the show, one Matthew Barley, strikes no chords with me whatsoever. His "charisma" leaves me stone cold and slightly appalled. 
     
    I see that the conductor, Hilary Davan Wetton, has an article in today’s Guardian on the subject of Classical Star. I agree with every word that he writes.  
  • Coder or Killer?

    This little quiz shows you the faces of ten people, and invites you to identify which of two groups they belong to. They are either inventors of computer programming languages, or they are serial killers. I got 50% right. Could do better, obviously.
     
    (hat tip to Robert for the link)
  • The Art of Hyperlinking

    Jeff Atwood has an interesting post over at Coding Horror on the art of hyperlinking. Naturally, he refers to Ted Nelson and Project Xanadu, which I’ve also mentioned in passing before. But Atwood has a link to a 1995 article (in Wired) on Nelson, which I hadn’t read, and which gives a lot of background on the man and his motivations. In turns haunting, despairing or seemingly totally insane, the people who swim through this aquarium are not those with both feet firmly on the ground:
    "Nelson records everything and remembers nothing. Xanadu was to have been his cure. To assist in the procedure, he called upon a team of professionals, some of whom also happened to be his closest friends and disciples. In the end, the patient survived the operation. But it nearly killed the doctors".
    Definitely worth a read. Atwood rounds off his post with an excellent summary of link usability tips. I wish that more web designers would follow them.